Gay Mob to Christian Worshippers: “We’re going to kill you. We know who you are.”

WorldNetDaily has published a story detailing an incident in San Francisco where a gay mob has attacked Christians who were worshiping outside. As they surrounded the worshipers, the mob told them, “We’re going to kill you. We know who you are.” Other threats included, “We are going to follow you all the way home!” and referring to the Christians as “hypocrites”.

I find it quite ironic and hypocritical of the “gays” to call Christians hypocritical, yet they are the ones who are, not only causing civil disobedience and even criminal acts, but intolerant of people, especially Christians, who do not side with them. The people of California voted against legalizing gay “marriage”. Their issue isn’t with the Christians, Mormons, or any other “group”, but with the people of California.

The Church has always spoken against homosexuality; it is God’s written Word that homosexuality is a sin. The same thing is true when other sinful activities are raised, such as abortion and premarital sex. No amount of protest against Christianity is going to suddenly change the mind of the Church.

“Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonor their own bodies between themselves: Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshiped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen. For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature: And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error which was meet. “ — Romans 1:24-27

“People would come stand with us and join us,” she said. “We got to pray for some people.”

But then angry men began yelling profanities and warning the Christians to leave the district.

(Warning: Video may contain offensive language)

One asked, “Why are you here?”

The leader of the group said, “We’re here to worship God, and we’re here because we love you.”

A group of men approached the Christians and covered them with a large cloth, backing them into a corner. Then the angry mob began swearing and growing larger. The bars began emptying out, and a crowd completely surrounded the Christians.

The woman said she and her friend were doused with hot coffee. One man took a Bible from her friend, hit her on the head with it, pushed her to the ground and began kicking her. People began lunging at the Christian group, blowing whistles in their ears.

“They started saying, ‘We’re going to kill you,'” she said. “They started taking our pictures and saying, ‘We’re going to kill you. We know who you are.”

Then she said a man jumped through the crowd and pushed her forehead.

Just then, a squad of police officers arrived in riot gear, surrounding the Christians and forming a protective human wall.

She said the police told them, “You have to leave if you want to make it out.”

When the group continued praying, an officer came back and said, “You don’t have a choice anymore. We’re going to escort you out.”

The officers then took the Christians to their cars. The angry mob began lunging at them through the riot gear and chanting “Shame on you!”

Some yelled, “We are going to follow you all the way home!” Others called the Christians “hypocrites.”

One man screamed into a camera, “We don’t ever want them coming back. Do you understand that, other Christians? Do you understand that, other Mormons? I’m talking to you, people. Yeah, you. Stay out of our neighborhood if you don’t like us. Leave us alone!”

The woman said her group had merely organized a peaceful fellowship and wasn’t there to condemn homosexuals.

“We hadn’t preached,” she said. “We hadn’t evangelized. We worshipped God in peace, and we were about to die for it.”

“Their rights were respected,” Joe Schmitz, an opponent of Prop. 8, told San Francisco’s KTVU Channel 2. “They got a chance to go ahead and pray on the sidewalk, and I had the opportunity to express my freedom of speech, which is telling them to get out of my neighborhood.”

The following day, approximately 20,000 people marched in San Francisco to protest passage of California’s Proposition 8 protecting traditional marriage. Several thousand people conducted other protests around the nation in cities such as Manhattan, Chicago and Los Angeles. According to reports, many protesters feeling emboldened by the recent election chanted, “Yes we can!” – a slogan popularized by the Barack Obama campaign.